The beauty our language is anyone can add a word. If you can’t think of a word to communicate what you want, you can make one up. Such inventions are called nonce words — “coined and used apparently to suit one particular occasion sometimes independently by different writers or speakers but not adopted into use generally.” (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/nonce%20word) Merriam-Webster uses the example ringday, as in “four girls I know have become engaged today: this must be ringday.”

Nonce words are not to be confused with nonsense words, which have no real meaning, like jabberwocky (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonsense_word). They’re fun to think up, but will never make it into general usage.

Occasionally you hear a word and don’t know whether it is real or not. I’d never realized decider was a word until President George W. Bush used it. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos recently used complexifier, as in “Even though The [Washington] Post is a complexifier for me, I do not at all regret my investment.” Is it a real word? While some people aren’t convinced, yes, it is a real word, although more in French than English (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/08/business/complexifier-meaning-definition.htm).

So you never know. Maybe something you think up will end up in a dictionary someday. Just keep using it in social media and see if it catches on.